More public libraries, their relevance at stake, see helping homeless people as a core mission
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Jeffery Bailey sleeps in a tent in a churchyard at night. He spends his days surfing the Internet, reading, and enjoying music and movies.
He does all this at the Nashville Public Library, a place of warmth and shelter in this freezing winter.
Twenty-five years have passed since the American Library Association adopted a policy advocating for full access to poor people. But the association's Sanford Berman says many libraries need to do more to make serving the homeless a core mission.
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Nashville's library is an exception, replacing magazine racks with computer terminals and bringing in social workers trained in mental health care. Bailey, for one, is grateful to feel welcome.